More Bad News ... (1996)

Originally released in 1996 when we were still a trio, this is the first
Broadside Electric recording to feature the Chapman Stick®,
Zeta violin, crumhorn and rauschpfiefe. 10 tracks of steaming electro-folk:
Child ballads, songs from Ireland, America and France, and tunes from all
over Europe. Available on CD (CS 1704D) and
chrome cassette (CS 1704C).

The More Bad News compact disc has since been re-pressed. Some audio
problems have been corrected and three extra tracks added. There is a
trade-in offer for owners of the original pressing of the CD (CS 1705D).

More Bad News is the third Broadside Electric album. This
Philadelphia band has spent 5 years researching and assembling a collection
of folk music, ranging from English ballads to Klezmer, from Balkan dances to
French hurdy-gurdy music. Then they've dragged it all out back and mercilessly
smacked it around. This disc contains some of the latest results.

MORE BAD NEWS ...

BABYLON(trad.) 5:46

We've decided to open this album with what has become only the second most gory
ballad in our repertoire. Our hero goes about his daily murderous business, but
on this particular occasion finds that he has not done his research.

This ballad is Child No. 14. We took both the tune and the words from Bronson's
The Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads, variant #4, "The Bonnie
Banks of the Virgie, O." This version was originally collected in 1929. It
appears in Greenleaf and Mansfield's Ballads and Sea Songs of
Newfoundland.

An Englishman lands in jail during an ill-advised trip to Turkey, but finds
an unlikely accomplice. There is a happy ending, but we think it's a good
song anyway.

For our version of Child ballad No. 53, we consulted Bronson and combined the
tunes of two versions: Variant #53, "The Turkish Lady" from John Harrington
Cox's Traditional Ballads Mainly from West Virginia, and Variant #62,
"Lord Bateman" from West Chinwick, England, collected by Cecil Sharp.
Belasicko Oro is a dance from former-Yugoslav Macedonia.

BUCIMIS(trad.) 3:58

A Bulgarian dance in 15/8. We perform it faster than we've ever heard it,
so we've likely rendered it undanceable. But you're absolutely welcome to try!
Apparently you don't even need 15 feet.

We first heard a version of this tune from Severnjasko on a recorded
collection of dances. We ended up using a slightly different version,
from Shope, as transcribed by Richard Geisler in his
Bulgarian Collection.

SILKIE(Tom Rhoads) 5:13

A silkie is a creature of Celtic mythology who takes the form of a seal and a
human interchangeably, a plot device which works well in this bit of soap-style
melodrama.

This is our version of Child No. 113, "The Great Silkie of Sule Skerry." We
were unsatisfied with the various tunes traditionally associated with this
ballad. Tom wrote us a completely new tune for this version, and re-wrote
the bulk of the words as well. The events of the story are unchanged.

THE SPINNING WHEEL AND THE BRONZE AXE(reels) 3:44

The First House in Connaught(trad., Ireland),
Oot be Est da Vong(trad., Shetland),
Sleep Soon Ida Moarnin'(trad., Shetland), and
The Bank of Ireland(trad., Ireland)

We gathered this mix of reels from a number of collected sources. The overall
title was achieved by means of a favorite method: flipping randomly through
old college texts. In this case, we victimized the Marx-Engels Reader.

PASTURES OF PLENTY(Woody Guthrie) 4:55

"To you the earth yields her fruit, and you shall not want if you but know how
to fill your hands. It is in exchanging the gifts of the earth that you shall
find abundance and be satisfied. Yet unless the exchange be in love and kindly
justice, it will but lead some to greed and others to hunger." - Kahil Gibran

AS I ROVED OUT(trad.) 4:23

A fun Irish song that every remotely Irish-flavored band eventually gets
around to. As if parents didn't have enough reasons to disapprove of kids
having casual sex, this song relates another old and good one.

We were inspired by Boiled In Lead's version, but ours quickly evolved into
a new animal.

GAS NIGN & MAKEDONSKO DEVOJCE(trad. & trad.) 4:37

Two tunes glued together! The first is an untitled Jewish melody. "Gas Nign"
is a common heading for many tunes, being Yiddish for "street tune." This one
was indeed taken from a live performance in the streets of Tiraspol, Ukraine.
It was transcribed in 1937 by Moshe Beregovski, who collected thousands of
pieces of Jewish folk music while employed at the Ukranian Academy of
Sciences. We found it in Mark Slobin's Old Jewish Folk Music.

The second is a song from Macedonia. We didn't bother with the words, since
we're totally unfamiliar with the language. The title means "Macedonian Girl,"
and the lyrics remind us of the Beach Boys. We took this tune from the Geisler
transcriptions.

SHEATH AND KNIFE(words trad./melody anon.) 9:02

with Dospatsko Horo(trad.)

Can you people stand one more Child ballad? A friend suggested that this ballad
outscores "Babylon" on the Disgust-O-Meter (I'm paraphrasing), so of course we
had to work up our own version. While the body count is relatively low, there
are extenuating circumstances which push this one over the top. A son and
daughter find themselves in a jam, and they choose the ugly way out. Later,
the King and his son struggle over some of the finer points of pre-Freudian
symbolism.

We took our version of the lyric from Child No. 16. The melody is from an
anonymous 16th century French madrigal, which we'd had on the back burner
for a while, pending a bright idea. The tune at the end is a dance from
Dospat, Bulgaria.

J'AI VÛ LE LOUP(trad.) 3:01

with J'ai Vû le Loup, le Rénard, et la Bellette(trad.)

A French song mixed in with another French tune. We combined them for the most
noble possible musical reason: because they have the same name. The song title
means "I saw the wolf." The tune title goes two better with "I saw the wolf,
the fox, and the weasel." What I saw these animals doing was having a rowdy
dance party that I just thought I'd crash.

We learned the song from The Baltimore Consort and the tune from Malicorne.

All songs and tunes on this recording were arranged by Broadside Electric.

Recorded and mixed at Chill Factor Studios, Ardmore, PA
Engineered by Adam Glickman

Cover design by Jim Speer
Folder design and drawings by Helene Zisook
with indispensable help from Meg Newburger
and the people at Miller Designworks
Untitled painting of red agitated person by Ben Lewis

More Bad News ... (1997)

Once we decided to remaster "More Bad News" it seemed to be the perfect
opportunity to throw in some covers:

THE WORLD TURNED UPSIDE-DOWN(L. Rosselson) 3:55

Leon Rosselson's anthem for the dispossessed. Tom brought this song to us
because he feels that it goes to the heart of what socialism and social
consciousness should be about.

SUGAR TRADE(J. Taylor, T. Mayer, J. Buffet, arr. T. Rhoads) 2:25

We never thought we'd cover a James Taylor song, but hey, if Fairport
Convention can do one... Plus, Jim and Helene fell in love with Tom's
arrangement and prevented it from being suppressed.

MAGELLAN(J. McCann and P.K. Rugg) 4:54

with Snow on the Hills(Aina Eagan)

The Ballad of Magellan is an age-old tale of a voyage into
the unknown: a man travels to find his way to the East Indies and, in so
doing, traverses the mysteries and intricacies of his own soul. We cannot
stress enough the effect this deeply moving story had on the three of us.
After hearing it for the first time, we entered a state of hyper-awareness
where for a short time we grasped the answers to the pressing questions we
all ask ourselves about our place in the universe. We woke up three days
later in a canoe drifting around in the mighty Schuylkill River with no
recollection of our prior activities. *

Snow on the Hills is a wonderful jig we heard on a
Boiled in Lead album.

All songs and tunes on this recording were arranged by Broadside Electric.

* The truth is we heard it on "Kids Corner," one of the best radio shows on
the planet, and entered a state of Animaniawareness after which we woke up a
year later having watched too much TV. The song itself probably bears little
or no resemblance to anything that actually ever happened to anybody.